What's in the News

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Spaghetti

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #630 on: August 10, 2008, 10:04:43 AM »
50-year old (US) comedian Bernie Mac died at 2:00 am of pneumonia complications. 

I was not a fan in the sENse that I can tell you much about his work. I did hear him in interviews and found him charismatic and I enjoyed his work in a couple of films. He was quite entertaining in the film adaptations of Charlie's Angels.

50 is far too young. It reminds me of a very talented comedian named Robin Harris who also died way too young. I was a fan of Mr. Harris. Just as he was about to break into the mainstream he died of heart failure. Younger than 50, I believe. Now I am also reminded of Richard Jeni, who took his own life at an early age. It's all too sad. All three men brought smiles to many people.
"Most young people were getting jobs in big companies, becoming company men. I wanted to be an individual."
Haruki Murakami

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Wags

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #631 on: August 10, 2008, 05:40:07 PM »
Found this interesting item, I know I google is getting more popular so:

Quote
Google 'gadgets' called gateways for hackers

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/08/09/2329850.htm

I choose to insert this relevant choice tidbit here:
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"I could force you to download child porn or send subversive material to China," Mr Hansen said. "The exploitation is almost limitless. Google has to fix it."
aoaoaoaoao

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #632 on: August 10, 2008, 08:15:13 PM »
If it was US attacking Georgia, by now that would become the only news all over TV besides Olympics.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #633 on: August 10, 2008, 10:11:15 PM »
I agree.  How is the world ignoring this?  Georgia's a middle-sized, advanced country with a military to match.  This should be one of the biggest news stories of the year.
And there is no liar like the indignant man... -Nietszche

Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task. -William James

englishmoose.com

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Ruth

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #634 on: August 10, 2008, 10:20:43 PM »
I also agree.  This is very serious.  I must admit I don't know much about the history, but I'm finding daily updates on the current situation on internet news sites.
If you want to walk on water, you have to get out of the boat.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #635 on: August 11, 2008, 07:44:57 AM »
It's been reported quite a lot on CNN. Apparently, Georgia just called a one-sided truce.
"Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination." Oscar Wilde.

"It's all oojah cum spiffy". Bertie Wooster.
"The stars are God's daisy chain" Madeleine Bassett.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #636 on: August 11, 2008, 07:47:55 AM »
Team GB won a gold medal today.  agagagagag

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #637 on: August 11, 2008, 03:39:14 PM »
Let's hope this madness ends before more people die.  bibibibibi And it affects the world's economy. Apparently Euro fell towards US$.

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #638 on: August 11, 2008, 04:02:36 PM »
Truce is not working - Gori is under heavy attack. This report from the ABC 30 minutes ago.

United States Vice-President Dick Cheney has called Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to say "Russian aggression must not go unanswered," the vice-president's office said.

The United States has accused Russia of seeking regime change in Georgia as the US pushes the UN Security Council to call for a ceasefire in the widening, bloody Caucasus conflict.

The simmering conflict between Russia and its small, former Soviet neighbour Georgia erupted late on Thursday when Georgia sent forces into South Ossetia, a small pro-Russian province which threw off Georgian rule in the 1990s.

Moscow said 2,000 civilians were killed and thousands made homeless in a "humanitarian catastrophe" but there has been no independent confirmation of the number of dead and wounded throughout the region.

Russia, which has accused Georgia of "genocide" in South Ossetia, had provided support to the separatists and acted as a peacekeeper in the province, responded to Georgia's invasion by pouring troops and tanks south through the Caucasus mountains into South Ossetia to drive back the Georgians.

Russian troops and tanks took control of Tskhinvali, the region's devastated capital, early on Sunday after a three-day battle.

Georgia offered Russia a ceasefire and peace talks on Sunday after pulling troops back from rebel South Ossetia's capital, and mediators began a mission to end the internationally condemned fighting.

However, some fighting still gripped parts of the Caucasus region and Russia demanded an unconditional Georgian withdrawal.

The conflict has alarmed the West, which views Georgia as a valuable, if volatile, ally because of its strategic location on an energy transit route carrying oil from the Caspian to Europe.

Mr Cheney's office said in a statement that "the Vice-President expressed the United States' solidarity with the Georgian people and their democratically elected Government in the face of this threat to Georgia's sovereignty and territorial integrity".

It said Mr Cheney told Mr Saakashvili that "Russian aggression must not go unanswered, and that its continuation would have serious consequences for its relations with the United States, as well as the broader international community".

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner arrived in Tbilisi at the head of an international team of mediators, the first top level diplomatic mission to fly to the region in an attempt to stem the bloodshed. It was due to move on to Moscow on Monday.

After meeting Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, Mr Kouchner said a "controlled withdrawal of the troops" was his main priority.

"Coming back to the table, negotiations, peace talks, a political solution. That's it. Easy to say, very difficult to do," Mr Kouchner said.

Mr Saakashvili appeared smiling but dishevelled to meet Mr Kouchner, before showing him the night-time view of Tbilisi from a hillside.

"It is the most surreal world crisis I could ever imagine," the Georgian leader told reporters.

Devastation

Russian television showed what it said were pictures from Tskhinvali of burnt-out buildings, wounded civilians receiving medical treatment in dilapidated basements and weeping mothers complaining of a lack of food and water.

"It started with severe bombing with artillery and planes and helicopters. Our boys, with their guns, could do nothing," resident Alla Dzhiloyeva told RTR state television by phone.

"They bombed us so may times all the houses are destroyed ... on one street there is only one wall left."

Pictures on NTV television showed Tskhinvali's main hospital in ruins and most of its 200 patients crammed into the basement.

Patients, many wincing, underwent treatment on tabletops in what looked like unsanitary conditions.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin cut short his visit to the Olympics on Saturday and flew to a field hospital in North Ossetia, visiting wounded troops and evacuees, and denouncing what he termed Georgia's "crimes against its own people".

Potentially widening the conflict, Sergei Bagapsh, the leader of Abkhazia, another separatist region on Georgia's Black Sea coast, said he had ordered 1,000 troops to push Georgian forces out of the Kodori Gorge, a strategic pocket of territory.

- Reuters

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fox

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #639 on: August 12, 2008, 05:25:28 AM »
And it affects the world's economy. Apparently Euro fell towards US$.

currency prices fall and rise all the time. its no big deal, that drop was about 300 pips which is only about a third more than the usual daily range.
 i trade it.
regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value.

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #640 on: August 12, 2008, 04:39:18 PM »
It's serious - but so is the coup is Mauritania, the Israelis telling the Eritreans to leave Tel Aviv, the starving IDPs in Yemen, the flooding in Chad, the starving in Ethiopia, the increase in weapons in Kenya ....

Endless.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #641 on: August 12, 2008, 09:24:20 PM »
Wearable beer belly and wine bra:



Free beer goggles with every purchase!
when ur a roamin', do as the settled do o_0

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #642 on: August 16, 2008, 12:57:52 AM »
It's serious - but so is the coup is Mauritania, the Israelis telling the Eritreans to leave Tel Aviv, the starving IDPs in Yemen, the flooding in Chad, the starving in Ethiopia, the increase in weapons in Kenya ....

Endless.

Russia and Georgia are AT WAR.  Russian tanks are battling Georgian tanks.  Both countries are nuclear powers. 
And there is no liar like the indignant man... -Nietszche

Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task. -William James

englishmoose.com

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #643 on: August 16, 2008, 01:17:15 AM »
B.C. teacher sentenced to more than 3 years for sexual abuse of Thai boy
Last Updated: Friday, August 15, 2008 | 1:08 AM ET CBC News

A British Columbia teacher who admitted he sexually abused a 13-year-old boy in Thailand and photographed the offence was sentenced Friday to three years and three months in a Thai prison.

Christopher Paul Neil sits in a cell at a criminal court in Bangkok in June. (Apichart Weerawong/Associated Press)
Christopher Paul Neil, 33, of Maple Ridge, B.C., who worked as a teacher in different parts of Asia before his arrest last October, avoided a possible six-year, six-month sentence by pleading guilty in May. He was also sentenced to pay a fine of 60,000 baht, or about $1,700 US.

"OK," was Neil's only comment to reporters after the verdict was read. His interpreter said Neil, dressed in a prison uniform and wearing ankle chains, would not appeal.

During the trial, Neil admitted that he took the photos, but said he did not post the pictures online.

He pleaded not guilty in early June to similar charges involving the teen's brother, who was nine years old at the time of the alleged offence. He faces up to 20 years in that case, which goes to trial on Oct. 7.

Neil was the subject of an international police search last year after Interpol released censored photos of him allegedly engaging in sexual acts with young boys from different parts of southeast Asia, including Cambodia and Vietnam.

The photos were found online in 2004, but the face of the perpetrator was digitally obscured by a swirl shape. Interpol unscrambled the images with the help of German police computer experts three years later, and circulated the pictures publicly.

Hundreds of tips were received and Neil was arrested 11 days after the Interpol appeal was launched.

Neil taught at various schools in Thailand, South Korea and Vietnam since at least 2000.
And there is no liar like the indignant man... -Nietszche

Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task. -William James

englishmoose.com

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #644 on: August 16, 2008, 02:22:17 AM »

Russia cluster bombed Georgia - claim

From correspondents in Tbilisi | August 15, 2008

INTERNATIONAL rights group Human Rights Watch said today it had evidence that Russian aircraft had dropped cluster bombs on Georgia, including the flashpoint city of Gori, killing at least 11 civilians.

The New York-based non-governmental organisation said the dead included a Dutch journalist and that dozens more had been wounded.

Human Rights Watch said its researchers had spoken to doctors and victims and had examined photographic evidence that led them to conclude cluster bombs had been used in Gori and the nearby town of Ruisi, south of South Ossetia.

"Cluster bombs are indiscriminate killers that most nations have agreed to outlaw,'' said Marc Garlasco, senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch, in a statement.

"Russia's use of this weapon is not only deadly to civilians, but also an insult to international efforts to avoid a global humanitarian disaster of the kind caused by landmines.''

Dropped from aircraft or fired from artillery, cluster bombs explode in midair, scattering bomblets. They pose a lasting threat as many bomblets fail to explode on impact and act as landmines.

A landmark international convention banning cluster munitions was formally adopted by 111 countries in Ireland in May in a move that organisers hoped would stigmatise the lethal weapons as much as landmines.

Russia and Georgia did not take part.

"This is the first known use of cluster munitions since 2006, during Israel's war with Hezbollah in Lebanon,'' said the rights group.


It might be a war - or invasion - but it is pretty unlikely that either side will use their nuclear capabilities.

This article is really interesting, but as it is in "The Economist' it needs to be read pretty quickly.
http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?story_ID=11920992